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Johnson Denis - The Laughing Monsters

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Johnson Denis The Laughing Monsters
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Denis Johnsons is a high-suspense tale of kaleidoscoping loyalties in the post-9/11 world that shows one of our great novelists at the top of his game. Roland Nair calls himself Scandinavian but travels on a U.S. passport. After ten years absence, he returns to Freetown, Sierra Leone, to reunite with his friend Michael Adriko. They once made a lot of money here during the countrys civil war, and, curious to see whether good luck will strike twice in the same place, Nair has allowed himself to be drawn back to a region he considers hopeless. Adriko is an African who styles himself a soldier of fortune and who claims to have served, at various times, the Ghanaian army, the Kuwaiti Emiri Guard, and the American Green Berets. Hes probably broke now, but he remains, at thirty-six, as stirred by his own doubtful schemes as he was a decade ago. Although Nair believes some kind of money-making plan lies at the back of it all, Adrikos stated reason for inviting his friend to Freetown is for Nair to meet Adrikos fiance, a grad student from Colorado named Davidia. Together the three set out to visit Adrikos clan in the Uganda-Congo borderland but each of these travelers is keeping secrets from the others. Their journey through a land abandoned by the future leads Nair, Adriko, and Davidia to meet themselves not in a new light, but rather in a new darkness.

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Denis Johnson

The Laughing Monsters

For Charlie and Scout

ONE

Eleven years since my last visit and the Freetown airport still a shambles, one of those places where they wheel a staircase to the side of the plane and you step from European climate control immediately into the steam heat of West Africa. The shuttle to the terminal wasnt bad, but not air-conditioned.

Inside the building, the usual throng of fools. I studied the shining black faces, but I didnt see Michaels.

The PA spoke. Only the vowels came through. I called over the heads of the queue at the deskDid I hear a page for Mr. Nair?

No, sir. No, the man called back.

Mr. Nair?

Nothing for such a name.

A man in a dark suit and necktie said, Welcome, Mr. Naylor, to Sierra Leone, and helped me through the mess and chatted with me all through customs, which didnt take long, because Im all carry-on. He helped me outside to a clean white car, a Honda Prelude. And for me, he said, with a queasy-looking smile, two hundred dollars. I gave him a couple of one-euro coins. But, sir, he said, its not enough today, sir, and I told him to shut up.

The driver of the Honda wanted in the area of a million dollars. I said, Spensy mohnee! and his face fell when he saw I knew some Krio. We reached an arrangement in the dozens. He couldnt go any lower because his heart was broken, he told me, by the criminal cost of fuel.

At the ferry there was trouble a woman with a fruit cart, policemen in sky-blue uniforms throwing her goods into the bay while she screamed as if they were drowning her children. It took three cops to drag her aside as our car thumped over the gangway. I got out and went to the rail to catch the wet breeze. On the shore the uniforms crossed their arms over their chests. One of them kicked over the womans cart, now empty. Back and forth she marched, screaming. The scene grew smaller and smaller as the ferry pulled out into the bay, and I crossed the deck to watch Freetown coming at us, a mass of buildings, many of them crumbling, and all around them a multitude of shadows and muddy rags trudging God knows where, hunched forward over their empty bellies.

At the Freetown dock I recognized a man, a skinny old Euro named Horst, standing beside a hired car with his hand shading his eyes against the sunset, taking note of the new arrivals. As our vehicle passed him I slumped in my seat and turned my face away. After wed passed, I kept an eye on him. He got back in his car without taking on any riders.

Horst His first name was something like Cosmo but not Cosmo. Leo, Rollo. I couldnt remember.

I directed Emil, my driver, to the Papa Leone, as far as I knew the only place to go for steady electric power and a swimming pool. As we pulled under the hotels awning another car came at us, swerved, recovered, sped past with a sign in its window SPLENDID DRIVING SCHOOL. This resembled commerce, but I wasnt feeling the New Africa. I locked eyes with a young girl loitering right across the street, selling herself. Poor and dirty, and very pretty. And very young. I asked Emil how many kids he had. He said there were ten, but six of them died.

Emil tried to change my mind about the hotel, saying the place had become very demoted. But inside the electric lights burned, and the spacious lobby smelled clean, or poisonous, depending on your opinion of certain chemicals, and everything looked fine. Id heard the rebels had shot it out with the authorities in the hallways, but that had been a decade before, just after Id run away, and I could see theyd patched it all up.

The clerk checked me in without a reservation, and then surprised me:

Mr. Nair, a message.

Not from Michael from the management, in purple ink, welcoming me to the solution to all your problems, and crafted in a very fine hand. It was addressed To Whom It May Concern. Clipped to it was a slip of paper, instructions for getting online. The desk clerk said the internet was down but not always. Maybe tonight.

I had a Nokia phone, and I assumed I could get a local SIM card somewhere, but the clerk said not at this hotel. For the moment, I was pretty well cut off.

Good enough. I didnt feel ready for Michael Adriko. He was probably here at the Papa in a room right above my head, but for all I knew he hadnt come back to the African continent and he wouldnt, hed only lured me here in one of his incomprehensible efforts to be funny.

* * *

The room was small and held that same aroma saying, All that you fear, we have killed. The bed was all right. On the nightstand, on a saucer, a white candle stood beside a red-and-blue box of matches.

Id flown down from Amsterdam through London Heathrow. Id lost only an hour and I felt no jet lag, only the need of a little repair. I splashed my face and hung a few things and took my computer gear, in its yellow canvas carrier-kit, downstairs to the poolside.

On the way I stopped to make an arrangement with the barman about a double whiskey. Then at a poolside table in an environment of artful plants and rocks, I ordered a sandwich and another drink.

A woman alone a couple of tables away pressed her hands together and bowed her face toward her fingertips and smiled. I greeted her:

How dbody?

Dbody no well, she said. Dbody need you.

I cracked my laptop and lit the screen. Not tonight.

She didnt look in the least like a whore. She was probably just some woman whod stopped in here to ease her feet and might as well seize a chance to sell her flesh. Right by the pool, meanwhile, a dance ensemble and percussionist had all found their spots, and the patrons got quiet. Suddenly I could smell the sea. The night sky was black, not a star visible. A crazy drumming started up.

Off-line, I wrote to Tina:

Im at the Papa Leone Hotel in Freetown. No sign of our old friend Michael.

Im at the poolside restaurant at night, where theres an African dance group, I think theyre from the Kissi Chiefdom (they look like street people), doing a number that involves falling down, lighting things on fire, and banging on wild conga drums. Now one guys sort of raping a pile of burning sticks with his clothes on and people at nearby tables are throwing money. Now hes rolling all around beside the swimming pool, embracing this sheaf of burning sticks, rolling over and over with it against his chest. Its a bunch of kindling about half his size, all ablaze. Im only looking for food and drink, I had no idea wed be entertained by a masochistic pyromaniac. Good Lord, Dear Baby Girl, Im at an African hotel watching a guy in flames, and Im a little drunk because I think in West Africa its best always to be just a tiny bit that way, and the world is soft, and the night is soft, and Im watching a guy

Across the large patio, Horst appeared and threaded himself toward me through the fire and haze. He was a tanned, dapper white-haired white man in a fishing vest with a thousand pockets and usually, I now remembered, tan walking shoes with white shoelaces, but I couldnt tell at the moment.

Roland! Its you! I like the beard.

Cest moi, I admitted.

Did you see me at the quay? I saw you! He sat down. The beard gives you gravitas.

We bought each other a round. I told the barman, Youre quick, and tipped him a couple of euros. The staff are efficient enough. Who says this place has gone downhill?

Its no longer a Sofitel.

Who owns it?

The president, or one of his close companions.

Whats wrong with it?

He pointed at my machine. You wont get online.

I raised my glass to him. So Horst is still coming around.

Im still a regular. About six months per year. But this time Ive been kept home almost one full year, since last November. Eleven months.

The entertainment got too loud. I adjusted my screen and put my fingers on the keyboard. Rude of me. But I hadnt asked him to sit down.

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